You can also be fairly sure that those who manage to get through a passable ‘performance’ will have been supported by the technicians and stage managers who are probably more help to them than the coaches or mentors.

“Every ballet, circus, opera, operetta, exhibition, painting, concert, printing of a book, requires the intense effort of thousands and thousands of people, working forcedly at what are often harmful and humiliating tasks.” However, “it is possible to imagine that in the future physical labour will partly be replaced by machines” and “there will be “no need for the same people constantly to sit under the stage, moving the scenery and lifting machinery”.

This not the most recent assessment of the industry from Bectu but Leo Tolstoy writing at the end of the nineteenth century on the nature of art.

Job security is not one of the reasons that people seek a career in technical theatre. Indeed, they are mostly attracted by the same kind of passion that motivates directors, designers or actors.

However, the general public find that hard to understand. They never see us, or if they do we are skulking about in the shadows trying to pretend that we are not there. This is not the image of self-promoting showbusiness that they are led to expect and they think that we are only doing it so that we can get jobs as actors.

This article is sadly true. I know a company that, in the panic about things being difficult financially, is looking to reduce, if not eliminate, its production department. Funny thing is, they still plan to have productions.

Now, the wise question might be how do you propose to do your half million dollar productions with no production staff, but sadly, there is no answer to this.

As the article mentions, management is as much in the dark sometimes about what goes in to making a show, as the audience is....

A thoughtful piece inspired by the death of a friend. Shame we don't get the full name of the deceased as a proper remembrance:

What happens to old technicians?By Howard Bird for The Stage

Bill was 54 when the clock stopped ticking for him. A ludicrously young age to go nowadays, really, but a stroke and other health problems were major contributory factors. Why do I mention his death here? Well, he was a friend I didn’t really know and his death made me think about what happens to technicians when the curtain comes down on their career at the onset of middle age and fails to rise again. You know the old song - No One Loves a Fairy When She’s Forty - and I wonder whether that opinion is also valid for technicians when they pass that watershed.

Those of a sensitive nature are warned that the word "techie" appears in this article:

Technical rehearsals and fit-upsFrom The Stage

Actors always claim that they enjoy rehearsals more than performances. Many stage managers look forward to technical rehearsals as a moment when they get to exercise their authority most widely and most publicly. What do technicians look forward to?

Some, who work as freelances, do very little else but fit-ups. Is that what we enjoy?

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